Position: Reader in Law, Director, Centre on Human Rights in Conflict
Location: DH 145, Duncan House
Telephone: 020 8223 2113
Email: john.strawson@uel.ac.uk
Contact address:
John Strawson
School of Law and Social Sciences (LSS)
University of East London
Duncan House
Stratford High Street
London E15 2JB
John Strawson is a colonial legal historian with contemporary interests in International law, the Middle East and Islamic Law. He has written on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, Islamic law in colonial India, Law and September 11 2011, the Iraq war and the Arab Spring. His current interests include conflict resolution and the transitional process in the Middle East and the implications of colonial rule for current images of Islamic law.

He has held visiting positions at the International Institute for Social Sciences in Netherlands (now of the Erasmus University Rotterdam), the Institute of Law at Birzeit University, Palestine and was visiting professor of law at the International Islamic University Malaysia in 2007. He has held research grants from the British Council, the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and the British Academy. He broadcasts on international law, the Middle East and Islamic Law.
His publications include (as editor) Law after Ground Zero (GlassHouse/Routldege-Cavendish 2002), Partitioning Palestine: Legal Fundamentalism in the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict (Pluto Press, 2010) and co-editor (with Barry Collins) of Iraq and Human Rights a special issue of the International Journal on Contemporary Iraqi Studies, (Vol. 5. No. 3 (2011). He is currently working in a book on the history of Islamic Law in India.

Reviews:
Books and Edited Work:
Essays
Opinion Pieces:
Comments on Partitioning Palestine: Legal Fundamentalism in the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict
In his highly original contribution to the Israel-Palestine problematic, John Strawson focuses on the three key legal texts of 1922, 1947 and 1993-99. He writes in the spirit of Edward Said, who emphasized the power of discursive images in texts. According to Strawson’s critique, the international law of these texts has been turned into a magical substance to ensure that good triumphs over evil, as if in the world of Harry Potter. Strawson therefore wishes to break the spell of the past, in which each party has constantly refreshed its confidence in the legal justice of its case. He intends to irritate many Palestinians and Israelis, and their supporters. This fascinating and erudite analysis will without doubt succeed.
(Professor Bill Bowring, Birkbeck, University of London)
From reviews of Law after Ground Zero
Law after Ground Zero is offered as offered as a contribution to this necessary debate about the relationship between law and human rights in an insecure global society. The new period has presented us with opportunities to review and reflect on legal culture, especially international law,constitutional law and human rights.Significntly, this also extends to Islamic law - and I would suggest, by implication to other non-Western stystems as well.
Law after Ground Zero also offers an alternative picture of the 'clash of civilizations' so pressed on us in the aftermath of September 11. The complexities of international society, including multinational states, mass mirgration, regional and international groupings means thart that 20th century stereoptypes no longer work well. The discussions in this collection of Islamic law and traditional legal institutions in Afghanistan underline the implications they have for law. The aftermath of September 11 seems to have created a new space in which to think about legal theory and practice. Law after Ground Zero places critical issues on the agenda.
James L Patton, Chinese Yearbook of International Law and Affairs, Vol. 20 (2002).
this is a book that will provide a useful contribution to the literature of September 11. The best chapters raise stimulatiing issues that all those with an interest in international law post September 11 need to conisder.
Kanishka Jayasuriya, European Journal of International Law, Vol. 15, No. 3 (2004)
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